Daily Camera (Boulder)

Buffs offense posted cringewort­hy numbers

Quarterbac­ks inconsiste­nt, while O-line improved

- By Brian Howell bhowell@ prairiemou­ntainmedia.com

A year ago, a common thought about the Colorado Buffaloes’ offense was that it couldn’t get much worse.

After all, the Buffs had one of the least productive offenses in the country during the 2021 season.

Yet, remarkably, CU’S offense got worse this year.

CU (1-11, 1-8 Pac-12) started four different quarterbac­ks and never really found much rhythm with any of them.

The Buffs did actually gain more yards than last year, 281.3 per game compared to 257.6 in 2021 — but still ranked 128th in the country out of 131 teams (129th last year).

On the scoreboard, however, CU managed just 15.4 points per game, which not only ranked 127th nationally, but is the worst by any team in the 12-year-history of the Pac-12 Conference.

But, hey, at least the Buffs weren’t as bad as rival Colorado State (13.2 points per game) or the woeful Denver Broncos (14.3).

The season began with head coach Karl Dorrell leading the team and firstyear coordinato­r Mike Sanford guiding the offense. After five games, Dorrell was fired, Sanford was put into the interim head coaching role and tight ends coach Clay Patterson was promoted to coordinato­r.

Shuffling the coaching staff didn’t do much to change the offense, though. The Buffs averaged 277.0 yards and 13.4 points before the change and posted 284.3 yards and 16.9 points after the change.

Like 2021, this was a rough season for the Buffaloes’ offense, but there were some bright spots along the way. in the passing game as expected. The rest of the group, all freshmen, caught a combined nine passes for 48 yards. Grade: C.

Offensive line: After a disastrous 2021 season, the line came together and had a solid season overall for the Buffs.

This was the most consistent position group on offense. Alabama transfer Tommy Brown and junior Casey Roddick solidified the group at the guard spots. After some earlyseaso­n shuffling at tackle, the Buffs settled on Gerad Christian-lichtenhan (left) and Jake Wiley (right). Wiley was much better than a year ago. Austin Johnson and true freshman Van Wells handled the center duties and weathered some growing pains. Grade: Bminus.

Kicking: Sophomore Cole Becker didn’t get a lot of work this season, but he was exceptiona­l and improved upon his solid freshman year. He finished 11-for13 on field goals (84.6%) and 20-of-21 on extra points. He also put 34 of 43 kickoffs (79.1%) into the end zone for touchbacks. Grade: A.

Overall: Obviously, it was a disappoint­ing season for CU’S offense, which scored just 20 touchdowns, lacked explosiven­ess and struggled to stay on the field. CU converted only 31.7% of the time on third downs (119th nationally) and 39% of the Buffs’ possession­s ended with three-and-outs (compared to 13% for the opposition). Grade: D-minus.

Offensive MVP: WR Jordyn Tyson. CU didn’t find him a lot in the first five games. And then he wound up missing the final three games with an injury. Yet, for four games in the middle of the year, the true freshman proved to be CU’S most explosive player. He finished with 22 catches for 470 yards and four touchdowns and also had an 88yard punt return for touchdown. Four of CU’S six longest plays on offense were passes to Tyson. Honorable mention: RB Alex Fontenot.

Top newcomer: RG Tommy Brown. Certainly this one could have gone to Tyson, but to spread the wealth, we’ll go with Brown. In his first year at CU after transferri­ng from Alabama, he overcame an offseason injury to start all 12 games at right guard — the only player on offense to start every game at the same spot. Honorable mention: RB Anthony Hankerson.

Most improved: RT Jake Wiley. Playing at left tackle in 2021, he had a rough season. This year, he settled in at right tackle and was significan­tly better overall. Honorable mention: RB Deion Smith.

Best comeback: QB JT Shrout. No, his numbers weren’t great, but Shrout missed the entire 2021 season with a knee injury and fought his way back. He started seven games and led the team with 1,220 passing yards and seven touchdowns. Honorable mention: WR Maurice Bell.

 ?? CLIFF GRASSMICK — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? University of Colorado Boulder quarterbac­k JT Shrout passes against Oregon during a game on Nov. 5.
CLIFF GRASSMICK — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER University of Colorado Boulder quarterbac­k JT Shrout passes against Oregon during a game on Nov. 5.

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